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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Superb Collection of Short Stories,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
I love the character of Miss Marple. The way she is constantly underestimated never ceases to amuse. Agatha Christie was up to her best when she wrote these stories. Nothing's predictable except that Miss Marple will solve the crime. My favorites in this collection are from The Tuesday Club Murders. None of the stories in this book are very long but with each one I couldn't wait to get to the end and find out who the murderer was. I've read the book twice yet I still couldn't recall or predict who the murder would be in the majority of the stories. Great book!
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"Never say to yourself that anyone is above suspicion.",
By
This review is from: Miss Marple: the Complete Short Stories (Paperback)
The words quoted above appeared in a short story by Agatha Christie called "The Four Suspects." They were not spoken by Miss Marple but by "that well-groomed man of the world, Sir Henry Clithering," retired now and residing in St Mary Mead or nearby, but "until lately Commissioner of Scotland Yard." The words were addressed to Sir Henry's new neighbour, a certain Miss Jane Marple. There is EVERY reason to assume that Miss Marple agreed.
An earlier reviewer quoted a short passage from "An Autobiography" by Christie. I shall quote a little more extensively from the same source: "Miss Marple," wrote Dame Agatha, "insinuated herself so quickly into my life that I hardly noticed her arrival. I wrote a series of six short stories for a magazine, and chose six people whom I thought might meet once a week in a small village and describe some unsolved crime. I started with Miss Jane Marple, the sort of old lady who would have been rather like some of my grandmother's Ealing cronies--old ladies whom I met in so many villages where I had gone to stay as a girl. Miss Marple was not in any way a picture of my grandmother; she was far more fussy and spinsterish than my grandmother ever was. But one thing she did have in common with her--though a cheerful person, she always expected the worst of everyone and everything, and was, with almost frightening accuracy, usually proved right...." Later, she added, "Miss Marple was born a the age of sixty-five to seventy--which, as with Poirot, proved most unfortunate, because she was gong to have to last a long time in my life. If I had had any second sight, I would have provided myself with a precocious schoolboy as my first detective; then he would have grown old with me." The first sextet of magazine stories were published in the late 1920s but did not achieve the dignity of book publication until 1932, two years after the publication of "Murder at the Vicarage," the first novel to feature Miss Marple. The 1932 volume contained the first sextet of stories mentioned by Christie in her autobiography, plus a second sextet and one more story to provide a satisfactorily ominous title for the collection, "The Thirteen Problems." (In the US, the book appeared--less happily--as "The Tuesday Club Murders.") Christie wrote seven more short stories for Miss Marple. They all are included in this volume. The later stories are good enough, but Miss Marple had so grown in stature that her true milieu was the full-length mystery novel. I suggest that special note be taken of the tenth story, "A Christmas Tragedy." This story represents a sea change in Miss Jane Marple. In all prior appearances she had been a mere device, a voice through which the author could resolve her little puzzles. With this story, the fully developed, elderly, tough as nails, knitting Nemesis of the novels emerges. These twenty stories are competent, if not brilliant. No-one, least of all Agatha Christie, would call them literature. They are amusements, clever puzzles set to dialogue. As such, most of them are splendid. There are a couple of minor misfires, one in which the solution to a coded message is in English when by the logic of the story it should have been in German, another in which Christie chose to emulate the mechanically-oriented stories common in those days among the works of her less-talented contemporaries. A classic Christie work incorporates some deceptively simple example of what might be called mental sleight-of-hand. Stories that depend on gimmicked mechanical implements and the like seem somehow beneath Dame Agatha's dignity. Reading these stories quickly demonstrates that Agatha Christie was born one of nature's great re-cyclers. Dame Aggie had a strong tendency to ... ahem, quote from herself when a good plot was involved. For those who would put a more positive spin on the simple facts, then it might be said that within these stories may be found seeds that later sprouted into full-length mystery classics such as "A Murder is Announced" and "Murder Under the Sun." The collection, I was surprised to discover, was dedicated to Leonard and Katherine Woolley. Sir Leonard Woolley was a great archeologist who famously excavated the ancient city of Ur in Sumeria, a land that would one day come to be known as southern Iraq. He became a media superstar when he dug down through the artifact-laden soil of Ur to find a very thick layer almost entirely free of man-made remains, and beneath that yet another layer of artifacts. Woolley attributed the break in the artifact layers to an extensive flood--or as he suggested a bit prematurely and the newspapers shouted loudly to all the world, not a flood but The Flood. When the shouting was at its height, Christie was already a world-famous author and an enthusiastic traveler. She visited the dig at Ur and stayed on for some time to lend a hand. There she met and fell in love with archeologist Max Mallowan, whom she married in the same year that she published "Murder at the Vicarage." Doubtless, anyone who has slogged this far is wondering why I've wandered so far off-track with all this biographical blather. The reason is simply that I am astonished to see Katherine Woolley's name in the dedication. When Christie arrived, Lady Woolley was very much in residence at her husband's archeological site. She regarded herself as Queen of all she surveyed and she went out of her way to make sure that the upstart mystery novelist knew it. Christie got on with Leonard Woolley, but she simply could not abide his wife. In one of her novels, she made a perfectly obvious caricature of Lady Woolley into the murderess. When she transformed the book into a stage play, Christie slyly converted her novel's villainess into her play's comic relief. This collection of the twenty Marple short stories are, as I've said, not literature themselves, nor even necessarily vintage Christie. Nevertheless, they are clever, entertaining and an invaluable memento of one of the great literary characters of the Twentieth Century. Five stars for Agatha, for Jane and for St Mary Mead.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Harper and Collins,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Miss Marple Mysteries) (Paperback)
The only criticism I have of this book, as it is otherwise completely entertaining, is that there are pages missing. Not that it skips from page 156 to 164 but that there are probably two pages of story line missing from 156 to 157. I'm just issuing this as a warning to anyone who purchases this edition. I will contact Harper and Collins and let them know about this as well.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Agatha Christie's immortal Miss Marple shines in detecting crime in the complete short story collection published by Harper,
By C. M Mills "Michael Mills" (Knoxville Tennessee) - See all my reviews (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Miss Marple Mysteries) (Paperback)
The brilliant mind of Dame Agatha Christie (1890-1976) created two of murder mystery fiction's greatest characters: the debonair and eccentric Belgian Hercule Poirot and old maid Jane Marple. While Poirot wears seven league boots solving murders all over the globe,Miss Marple has lived her entire life in the English village of St. Mary Mead. Nevertheless, Marple sports an incredible ability to ferret our murderers and solve crimes.!
This book is a collection of all twenty short stories in which Miss Marple appears. Most of the stories were published in "Thirteen Problems" in 1932. The additional seven stories are culled from ther short stories colletions written over the long career of Christie. The nettlesome cases are discussed in antimated conversation during the meeting of THE TUESDAY NIGHT CLUB. The club meets at the home of Jane Marple. Members of the exclusive club of friends consists of Miss Marple and five other persons. Each club member must present a "problem" which the five others seek to solve. Miss Marple always discovers who the murderer is in the case. The members of the club are Miss Marple the hostess; her novelist nephew Raymond West; Joan Lempiere an artist; Mr. Petherick a lawyer; Dr. Pender the local vicar and Sir Henry Clithering the well known Scotland Yard Commissioner who has retired. Clithering stands in respectful awe of Miss Marple's uncanning ability to solve crimes. All of the club members are bright as they seek answers to the foul deed of murder. In later tales in the collection the Tuesday Night Club gathers at the home of Colonel and Dolly Bantry. All of the short tales are well written with most having been produced for television. The stories are great light reading for a comfortable night at home on a rainy night or a trip to the beach for sunny days. Enjoy! Nothing profound but just good entertainment from the mistress of murder!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
Excellent as with all of the Miss Marple stories by Christie. I was disappointed a little because I thought I was getting a collection of Marple stories I did'nt already own. In fact, the book begins with the Tuesday Club Murders (which is already on my bookshelf). This was an error on my part because I should have checked the book out in more detail before purchasing. Still, a good collection to buy if you don't already have the stories in separate books. Besides, we Christie fans never tire of rereading about the exploits of her most famous detectives.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great condition,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
The perfect book to cuddle up on bed with...lovely thrilling stories in a light , travel-friendly paperback size. The book was in very good condition. Thanks for the speedy shipping too!
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Short Stories Short-Change Christie,
By
This review is from: Miss Marple: the Complete Short Stories (Paperback)
This collection of Miss Marple short stories highlights many of the things I find interesting about Christie, as well as some oWf her weaknesses. Christie's strength lies in setting up complicated plots and drawing out rich characters in all of their particularities. The short story format, then, takes away Christie's greatest strength. What is left are bare-bones Christie-style stories.
Each story in this collection is a whodunit, usually featuring a murder. Everyone is either bewildered, or convinced that the wrong person is guilty, except, of course, for Miss Marple. Christie affords no energy to the set-up; most of these stories begin with a group telling each other stories. The solutions to these stories involve knowledge of all sorts of things with which the average reader will have little familiarity, such as the uses and results of certain poisons. Perhaps most striking to me was just how weak the character of Miss Marple actually is. There's simply very little to her, except a conviction that young people are foolish. The introduction to the volume tries to argue otherwise, but I am not convinced. Christie aficionados will certainly want to read this volume, but I would recommend one of Christie's novels to the uninitiated.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mis Marple's the best,
By LynnieG (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Miss Marple: the Complete Short Stories (Paperback)
This short story collection is wonderful! Twenty delightful stories featuring Miss Jane Marple solving difficult cases. Miss Marples sharp observations, her spunk, wit, and intelligence shine through in these tales, making clear why Agatha Christie has created one of the greatest female sleuths of all time. If you're a fan of Christie's or Marple's, you can't go wrong with this colleciton.
12 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GREAT BOOK!!!!!!!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
This book is about a little old lady named Miss Marple who sits around and listens to people try to solve mysteries. Everyone thinks she is really quiet and dosen't really know what's going on. Boy are they in for a surprise!!!!!!!! I really liked this book beacuse it is mystery and humor mixed together.
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Miss Marple Short Stories,
By
This review is from: Miss Marple: The Complete Short Stories (Mass Market Paperback)
Quick response, book in good condition. there was a printing defect with the book, but it is still OK.
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Miss Marple: the Complete Short Stories by Agatha Christie (Paperback - July 10, 1997)
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